Journal of Traumatic Stress
Volume 13, Issue 3, 2000, Pages 413-426

Refugee families' experience of research participation (Article)

Dyregrov K.* , Dyregrov A. , Raundalen M.
  • a Center for Crisis Psychology, Fabrikkgt. 5, Bergen, 5059, Norway
  • b Center for Crisis Psychology, Fabrikkgt. 5, Bergen, 5059, Norway
  • c Center for Crisis Psychology, Fabrikkgt. 5, Bergen, 5059, Norway

Abstract

Because refugees can experience crisis, bereavement, and traumatization, there has been a rapid increase of research carried out with refugees. This study investigated how refugee families respond to participation in research. A previous study explored how adults and children had communicated about the difficult question of repatriation after arriving in a new country. Did the in-depth interviews harm or benefit them? Are there any ethical risks in research on traumatized refugees? From an original sample of 74 Bosnian refugees (5-73 years), 30 family members from 9 families including 14 children aged 6 to 19, were re-interviewed. The refugees rated participation as positive. A few parents lacked information that could have enabled them to inform the children better before the interviews. The study shows that studies on traumatized/bereaved populations can have beneficial effects.

Author Keywords

Research participation Research on refugees Bereavement research Interview effects

Index Keywords

Empirical Approach refugee clinical research bereavement human Refugees middle aged Stress, Psychological Ethics, Medical Bosnia and Herzegovina Aged Human Experimentation Biomedical and Behavioral Research ethnology Clinical Trials Bosnia-Herzegovina Humans attitude Adolescent male female Child, Preschool patient satisfaction Article major clinical study adult patient participation Interviews Child

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-0033860180&doi=10.1023%2fA%3a1007777006605&partnerID=40&md5=2c61c8a2295d3ac5dee29b5aa0d9d389

DOI: 10.1023/A:1007777006605
ISSN: 08949867
Cited by: 66
Original Language: English